Massachusetts Court Rules on Damages for Injured Workers
Massachusetts’ highest court recently ruled in a case of first impression that a workers’ compensation insurer is not entitled to a lien on the money awarded to claimants for pain and suffering.
This ruling from the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court on Feb. 12 could impact how much workers’ comp insurers in Massachusetts can recoup from claimants in similar cases in the future.
According to David J. Pellegrino, a partner at Partridge Snow & Hahn LLP who submitted an amicus brief on behalf of the American Insurance Association for this case, the court’s decision essentially reduces the pool of funds from which a workers’ compensation insurer can recoup its outlay.
If an employee wins damages from a third party, the employee’s workers’ comp insurer is statutorily entitled to a lien on the recovery for the amount that the insurer paid to the employee in benefits.
Case Background
In its ruling, the Supreme Judicial Court looked at a case involving two electricians, Robert DiCarlo and Bernard Martin. Both were injured during work, collected workers’ comp benefits, and then reached settlement agreements with third parties including damages for their pain and suffering.
Both workers received workers’ comp benefits from Twin City Fire Insurance, a subsidiary of Hartford Insurance Co. of the Midwest.
DiCarlo, who suffered serious injuries to his back in 2004 at a construction site, received $281,000 in workers’ comp benefits for medical expenses and lost wages.
DiCarlo then sued third parties including the construction site owner and the contractor managing that site. It resulted in a settlement of $100,000, with 35 percent of the settlement proposed to be allocated to DiCarlo’s pain and suffering and be exempt from the insurer’s lien.
In DiCarlo’s case, a Superior Court judge rejected a settlement agreement providing that the insurer would not have a lien on the damages for pain and suffering, concluding that the insurer’s lien attached to DiCarlo’s entire recovery.
DiCarlo appealed the decision, citing the Massachusetts Appeals Court’s 2011 decision in Curry v. Great American Insurance Co., which held that an insurer’s lien does not attach to damages paid for pain and suffering because workers’ comp does not cover those harms.
The other worker, Bernard Martin, was injured in 2010 while working at a construction site and received $566,000 in workers’ comp benefits. Martin also sued third parties. It resulted in a settlement of $1 million, with 35 percent of the payment proposed to be allocated for his physical pain and mental anguish and be exempt from the insurer’s lien.
In Martin’s case, a Superior Court judge approved a settlement agreement similar to the agreement rejected by the judge in DiCarlo’s case, and Twin City Fire appealed.
In both instances, Twin City Fire sought reimbursement from the employees’ recoveries, including their awards for pain and suffering.
But in its ruling, the Supreme Judicial Court stated that the insurer did not compensate the employees for their pain and suffering, and so cannot seek reimbursement from damages paid for those harms.
However, the court stated, the insurer can recover payments for harms that are covered by the workers’ comp statute, such as lost wages and medical expenses.
The court emphasized that this ruling will not deprive an insurer of its reimbursement rights where an employee and a third-party defendant reach a settlement that would “stack the deck” against the insurer by inappropriately allocating the bulk of damages to pain and suffering.
The court said MGL c. 152, Sec. 15 precludes such a result by requiring that all settlements be approved by the reviewing board of the Department of Industrial Accidents or by a judge after a hearing at which the insurer has a right to participate. Moreover, a settlement amount allocated entirely or in large part to pain and suffering will “be eyed by the court with a healthy dose of skepticism,” the court said.
Ruling’s Implication
Pellegrino explained that the general application had been to allow the workers’ comp insurer to recoup from the entire amount of an injured employee’s damages award regardless of classification.
That application changed with the Massachusetts Appeals Court’s 2011 decision in Curry v. Great American Insurance Co., which for the first time held that damages allocated as “pain and suffering” could not be reached by the workers’ comp insurer. At the time, the Supreme Judicial Court did not grant further review of Curry.
And the Feb. 12 decision “essentially reduces the pool of funds from which a workers’ compensation insurer can recoup its outlay based upon the way the third party tort system defines a damages award,” Pellegrino cautioned. “Because the pool of attachable funds is reduced, insurers are less likely to be made whole and will keep available funds out of the workers’ compensation system.” He said the industry will have to remain vigilant with regard to employees’ third party tort actions to make sure the bulk of damages are not inappropriately allocated to pain and suffering.